Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"dry land" Definitions
  1. land, rather than sea
"dry land" Antonyms
sea

396 Sentences With "dry land"

How to use dry land in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "dry land" and check conjugation/comparative form for "dry land". Mastering all the usages of "dry land" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The landing area might be water, mud or dry land.
Crews had whisked hundreds of stranded people to dry land.
Military paddle boats and helicopters were bringing people to dry land.
It depends, for one thing, on the definition of "dry land".
But when Hennix got to dry land, she couldn't find them.
They stayed until volunteers in boats escorted them to dry land.
Excessive, dry land can "act like concrete" despite precipitation, she explained.
If a merman starts attacking you, just get on dry land.
Therefore, 37.1 percent of US dry land is owned by some government.
On Thursday, officials tranquilized the animal and moved him to dry land.
Eventually, some of that complex life slithered and crawled onto dry land.
As an adult, pride and inertia have kept me on dry land.
That'll push water onto dry land and could result in catastrophic flooding.
He walked into Legends not long ago and, by chance, Guy was onstage, singing "Drowning on Dry Land," an Albert King hit from 1969: A cloud of dust just came over me, I think I'm drowning on dry land .
Military paddle boats were also being used to take people to dry land.
Working underwater proved too expensive and prospectors discovered new mines on dry land.
Dump water from boat compartments, bait buckets, and live wells on dry land.
The photos show Zarutskie covering her wound as she rushed to dry land.
Increasingly, fishermen are also making sure their gear returns safely to dry land.
It collapsed into the water and had to be hauled onto dry land.
The "Netted" have jobs, plush amenities and well-zoned houses on dry land.
"We think we can dry-land farm it in so many places," Lundberg said.
U.S. District Judge Darrin Gayles ruled that the lighthouse didn't qualify as dry land.
You can now see the band on dry land on two New York dates.
In the past decade-and-a-half, it's now all dry land around it.
Night life in Kailua-Kona can be somewhat sedate — at least, on dry land.
After an hour's swim, still free of visible rashes, we make for dry land.
All of a sudden, something spooked the dog into booking it for dry land.
Paramedics pulled him onto dry land, but were unable to revive him after performing CPR.
Troops in camouflage outfits helped people and pets reach dry land on small military boats.
Members of the military were also seen bringing people to dry land on paddle boats.
But Friday -- World Elephant Day -- the pachyderm finally set its feet back on dry land.
"Water has been the main problem for people in these dry-land areas," Kyalo said.
Also on Sunday, Longoria marked Christmas Eve with a fun photo — taken on dry land.
But don't get too excited, Auburn fans ... the guys made it back to dry land.
The thing that moves around 0.28 miles per hour on dry land is a tortoise.
Villagers helped haul him onto dry land, and he was bound with ropes and chains.
Soon after, having just been ferried to dry land, the co-pilot turns to Sully.
We are left adrift, as if waiting to find that safe spot of dry land.
It is possibly a curandero: a healer responsible for blessing dry land and ailing bodies.
Even while she was on dry land, she found a way to end up all wet.
Throughout millions of years, the plants moved out of the water and adapted to dry land.
Others showed stoplights partially knocked down as people stood on dry land watching the torrent of water.
They shuttled him to dry land but didn't know where to take him from there, he said.
Rescue personnel help children to dry land after their homes were flooded in Houston on Aug. 28598.
She is focusing on dry land training at the moment (which is exactly what it sounds like).
The inundation levels refer to a reasonable worst-case scenario for the flooding of normally dry land.
The dogs, now named Chinquapin and Florence, were brought into the boat and driven to dry land.
When you're ready to get back on dry land, head up to Vancouver's premiere peak: Grouse Mountain.
Antarctica is thought of as covered in ice, but a small part, about 1%, is dry land.
A new study, published today in Nature, found climate change could increase Antarctica's dry land by 25%.
This means that Daenerys make it to dry land, and that she has a battle to wage.
For many of his fellow young migrants, the dangers do not stop when they reach dry land.
There are some large basaltic regions on dry land, but they are not necessarily in convenient places.
Dispose of all bait in trash cans, at disposal stations, or above the waterline on dry land.
But his system doesn't work on dry land — like Las Vegas, home to his shark-themed resort.
These artifacts now sit on an expanse of dry land that will ultimately become a tourist park.
As we sail towards Sicily to bring our human cargo to dry land, we are moving slowly.
Back on dry land, Kalanick splits his time between New York and his hometown of Los Angeles.
The machine uses the same walking style as it does on dry land, so it retains its mobility.
Residents carry dogs through floodwaters to dry land after playing in the water briefly on the Big Island.
Dry land isn&apost hospitable to the creatures, who hide in rocks some 10 feet below the surface.
As Titanic turns 20, Jack and Rose are reuniting for a good cause – this time on dry land.
Federal prosecutors said the migrants never made it to dry land and should be sent back to Cuba.
But when that limited space is on dry land, the freedoms of the sea can seem far away.
There are a few places where what a geologist would call the ocean floor is actually dry land.
Only, in this case, replace cities with greenhouses, and the only resource being hunted here is dry land.
It's unclear whether existing species could move into the dry land or if animals there now could disappear.
The video plays on images of nature which are fundamental to O'Keeffe—a cactus, mountains, dry land, flowers.
Lecomte expects to finish his swim soon and be back on dry land at the end of August.
"When the sun rises, the devils will be gone, but we will be left in this dry land."
The resulting attack, staged by director Alan Taylor, plays a bit like a shark attack on dry land.
Over the weekend, Iowan Scott Shehan crossed state lines to help ferry donkeys and ponies to dry land.
Does the trailer make you want to learn more about wind power, both offshore and on dry land?
In some instances they took residents to their homes to gather belongings, then brought them back to dry land.
Some might thus argue that even by this stage, the step onto dry land had not been truly made.
Better to watch a fuccboi freeze to death than to have him disappear the second you hit dry land.
However, it has nearly the same amount of dry land as our planet, with seasons, weather, volcanoes and canyons.
And while it could swim to cross rivers, Razana was built to walk on dry land, Dal Sasso said.
The project offered freedom from life on dry land, the chance to build an ideal society out of nowhere.
If we have to, my family and I will leave, and buy a few more years on dry land.
They spend more time on dry land than anyone else, principally taking pictures of each other on their phones.
The scary thing is, unlike a slide on dry land, an underwater landslide can happen on almost any surface.
Overnight, residents turned their boats into water taxis, giving people rides out of town to dry land and back.
To overcome the small matter of not having any dry land, they brought a barge in to dump sand.
To overcome the small matter of not having any dry land, a barge was brought in to dump sand.
Masculine, maritime energy bursts forth throughout this item: Though on dry land, these men become sailors, nets, ropes, voyagers.
As they approach the shore, the dog sees something that demands immediate canine attention and leaps for dry land.
Sediment washed down from the Appalachian Mountains and carried by shore currents piled into dry land 4,500 years ago.
Trilobites When honeybees fall into water, they generate their own ripples, then glide to dry land, a study found.
You can see it here, bridges that used to be over water, at one point spanning nothing but dry land.
Comfort Morgan is helped to dry land after being rescued from her flooded home in Clodine, Texas, on Aug. 2646.
Luckily, with this new feature-packed speaker float from Sam's Club, hitting dry land just became a lot less necessary.
But they didn't make it to dry land, he said, and it isn't the court's role to reshape immigration policy.
Dogs are taken by boat through a flooded street to dry land in Sorrento, 50 miles northwest of New Orleans.
MORE: Three generations of refugees on today's crisis When Mohamed was back on dry land, he joined the rescue effort.
It also works on dry land if you just need a place for five people to lounge around a beach.
Once Marty had a hold on the canine, four other firefighters pulled the dog and her savior to dry land.
Sawadogo has traveled widely sharing his technique called Zai, helping people to grow food and make money from dry land.
The good Samaritan didn't have a phone but he did take Elijah from Bulmer and carried him to dry land.
The boat picked up both the DIY adventurer and his canine co-pilot and shuttled them off to dry land.
Journalists filmed police and Coast Guard officers that day wrestling the men off the vessel and on to dry land.
"Unfortunately, most of the whales beached themselves on dry land overnight and have not survived," Incident Controller Jeremy Chick said.
But the analysis showed that while normal waves slow when they hit dry land, tsunamis accelerate, catching people by surprise.
A dilapidated ship sits on dry land in Sheikh Wali, a coastal village in the northeast of Lake Urmia, Iran.
There also are poignant images of bears caring for their young, surrounded by melting ice, and isolated on dry land.
A pier in Lake Ostrowskie now sits almost entirely on dry land while canals previously linking adjoining lakes contain no water.
Of course, there are also some drawbacks to living off dry land, and Nick's rich neighbors won't let him forget it.
A young girl is helped to dry land after her family's home was inundated with floodwater in Houston on Aug. 228.
Cattle are driven through a flooded road as they are herded to trucks to be brought to dry land in Sorrento.
The ocean swallowed the beach – swamping neighborhoods that typically didn't flood – and left vehicles under water and boats on dry land.
The group&aposs president, Mongi Slim, says the Red Crescent will continue to assist the migrants once they reach dry land.
Yes, we saw dragons, Daenerys hitting dry land, Cersei gearing up to kick some ass, and Jon Snow being Jon Snow.
Later, another video shows a man taking the entire branch and placing it onto dry land, where it could scurry away.
Even if he sounds badly disoriented back on dry land, his most recent paintings have depicted a series of transportation catastrophes.
Still, Adrienne Campbell-Holt, directing for the Colt Coeur company ("Dry Land"), infuses seemingly banal scenes with an anxiety-making mood.
Deep pockets of water were broken up by areas of dry land, which gave way again to deep pockets of water.
This causes a deadly fluid buildup in the lungs, and people drown to death even when they're standing on dry land.
Four new picture books leave dry land behind to reflect on the rewards and perils of friendship, empathy, courage and more.
At one point, rescuers spotted Charlie on some dry land and tried to coax him into the boat, to no avail.
Out on dry land, I felt hollow in some indescribable way, but the water connected me to something larger than myself.
But the relief of being on dry land was mixed with concern over what was to come for many displaced Texans.
Given how much she talks about bathing, I am fairly certain she spends more time in water than on dry land.
The main characters are still drowning in that wake, scarcely bothered as to whether or not they ever reach dry land.
We're guessing the 76ers are happy their star point guard kept his feet on dry land -- can't risk a twisted ankle.
When the seaweeds died, they were "cooked" beneath sediment and their organic remains imprinted on rock found on dry land that once was the ocean "These new fossils suggest that green seaweeds were important players in the ocean long before their land plant descendants moved and took control of dry land," Xiao said in the news release.
Though the fossils were found on dry land, half a billion years ago, the creature's location would have been a shallow sea.
Their capsule landed upright on dry land, meaning they had to maneuver themselves halfway out of the capsule before being helped out.
The city's parks along the water also offer prime views of the display, in case you prefer to stick to dry land.
The family were supposed to bury the child according to local culture, but there was no dry land to bury him in.
But his prowess in the pool has often been overshadowed by his behavior on dry land, including a reality series on E!
On dry land, laying down—feet towards the blast—at least 15 feet away minimizes your chances of getting hit by shrapnel.
Under the program, local people who dig out the reservoirs receive free polythene liners and lessons on dry-land farming and aquaculture.
As ever with Ainslie, no sooner was he back on dry land on Thursday than he was looking to his next challenge.
In the end, the driver managed to skillfully maneuver the bus out of the situation and return his passengers to dry land.
Like humans, dogs need to train consistently and safely to conquer the run, swim and dry-land mushing portion of the race.
Moments later, you're back on dry land, somewhere in Canada, surrounded by howling packs of wolves and the rhythmic chirping of insects.
The result will be for such women to not go swimming at all, but to stay fully covered and on dry land.
Four-limbed creatures with spines — known as tetrapods — had evolved by 360 million years ago and went on to colonize dry land.
Then they floated off in the direction Mr. Njobi pointed, as Mr. Njobi stood on a patch of dry land and watched.
When they reached dry land, the rescuers hoisted the patients onto their backs to ferry them the last few feet to safety.
When they reached dry land, the rescuers hoisted the patients onto their backs to ferry them the last few feet to safety.
On dry land, he became a Lutheran minister, overseeing a flock of people with a fondness for bright felt banners and mayonnaise.
I also tested the Summit+ dozens of times on dry land, likewise with the included concentrate pads, but overall was not impressed.
Antagonist who wants to kill Jack Sparrow because of a personal slight, and can walk through walls, but can't go on dry land?
It has been 25 days since the passengers of the Diamond Princess cruise ship were last allowed to set foot on dry land.
STUDYING THE health of ecosystems on dry land—a habitat that biologists share with the organisms they are looking at—is challenging enough.
Now, back on dry land, Frankie and Bear are being cared for by volunteers until they can be reunited with their pet parents.
This is because 60 percent of Nebraska corn is irrigated, but 60 percent of the fields sampled on the tour are dry land.
Male diamondback terrapins never return to dry land after hatching, but can nonetheless be observed loitering to intercept females in shallow bay waters.
Most of the whales had died, said Jeremy Chick, incident controller at Western Australia's conservation department, after becoming stranded on dry land overnight.
Reaching the far side, some women and older people had to be pulled through the mud to reach dry land atop steep banks.
As a bonus, I realized that many of the lessons I learned on the waves could be translated for use on dry land.
We were able to calm them down first, and then once they got to dry land they were just so happy and relieved.
It's rare to feel a sense of accomplishment upon leaving an art exhibition, but then again, most gallery shows are on dry land.
According to the International Organization for Migration, by 2050 as many as 200 million climate refugees will seek dry land to call home.
From here, the Dragon will be recovered from the Pacific and its contents will be recovered once it's ferried back to dry land.
Waste on dry land isn't any better: The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that 22020 percent of landfill waste comes from packaging and containers.
Sure, this isn't the first swim brand to venture intro dry land, but it's nice to see them go beyond the swimsuit cover-up.
But after traversing the guitar muck for decades, even these guys have to rest their feet on dry land every once in a while.
It's unclear how the large pup ended up in the middle of the creek, but his is toasty and on dry land once again.
"Some of the most fun action in the movie actually takes place on dry land," screenwriter Will Beall teased in an interview with Slashfilm.
The area between Florida's Indian Pass and Crystal River, for example, could see 9 to 13 feet of water surging above normally dry land.
One sentient branch of the tree of life is descended from the animals that crawled onto dry land hundreds of millions of years ago.
It's also forecasting 6 to 8 feet of water above normally dry land from Cedar Key to Crystal River, Florida under the same conditions.
Once on dry land, they escorted him to a high school that they thought was serving as a shelter, but discovered it was closed.
ONE of the most important steps on the journey to Homo sapiens was that made by the first fish to crawl onto dry land.
Cuban migrants who have reached dry land in the past have benefited from U.S. immigration policy that allows them to apply for legal status.
Last week, the animal briefly set its feet back on dry land on World Elephant Day, before dying in the early hours of Tuesday.
Sharks evolved from the rest of the animal kingdom 400 million years ago—before the first adventurous amphibians left the oceans for dry land.
But what if the acre of dry land we thought we'd found was just the back of an angry turtle with daggers for teeth?
They had complained that under the 28500 rule created by the Obama administration, large swaths of often dry land required permits for routine activities.
They had complained that under the 2015 rule created by the Obama administration large swaths of often dry land required permits for routine activities.
They had complained that under the 2015 rule created by the Obama administration, large swaths of often dry land required permits for routine activities.
Floodwater can contain contaminants such as toxic waste and chemicals, as well as infectious diseases that survive better in water than on dry land.
She could get to dry land on a boat, but once there, she had no vehicle and no ride to get to the clinic.
These types of instruments sometimes float back down to dry land, Ms. Brown said, which is why researchers append notes describing the device's purpose.
Around 500 million years ago—when the Earth was already a ripe 4 billion years old—the first green plants appeared on dry land.
HAMILTON, Bermuda — Tom Slingsby, one of the world's top sailors, would really rather race close to shore and spend the night on dry land.
An aerial view of the scene showed them in waist-deep water, wading with a raft, to those stranded on small areas of dry land.
An answer is expected any day now in a fierce legal battle that centers on a key question: Does the lighthouse count as "dry land"?
Eleven passengers older than 80 have opted to serve the rest of their quarantine on dry land, but approximately 3,500 others are still on board.
It was sedated, then taken to dry land where its feet were washed with disinfectant before it woke up and went on its merry way.
Now back on dry land, the embarrassed cruise-goers have launched a heated battle with Holland America to clear their names and obtain a refund.
Republicans and industries like agriculture and developers ardently oppose the rule, saying it gives the government power over vast swaths of water and dry land.
In the South Pacific there are islands so overgrown with mangroves, you have to steer your boat a mile inland before you hit dry land.
A phone is stashed on board in case of emergencies, and the brothers will have some internet communication with support staff back on dry land.
Asked to clarify the senator's exact geographic coordinates, his spokeswoman, Christine Geed, said on Tuesday he was "in the States," presumably meaning dry land somewhere.
After plucking stranded residents from an apartment complex, the men, tired and soaking wet, hauled their boat to dry land and hit the road again.
Doug Ducey declared a state of emergency last week, freeing up more money to cover the growing costs of fighting fire on abnormally dry land.
But the deadly flooding that has deluged parts of Nebraska -- and created islands where dry land should be -- could get worse before it gets better.
But technological changes enabled more efficient farming to take place elsewhere, including on dry land, and southeastern Massachusetts is now dotted with struggling cranberry bogs.
High winds and dry land caused wildfires to rage across the West Coast, creating the most destructive and costliest fire season in California's history alone.
Tourist traffic clogs Venice's narrow streets, choking its glorious squares and pushing the locals of this enchanting floating city out and onto drab, dry land.
The video footage, captured by the Humane Society of the United States, also shows many dead cattle, and cows swimming in search of dry land.
How quickly Davy Jones's locker yields anything valuable will depend on the technological difficulty, and therefore the expense, of bringing useful discoveries back to dry land.
"When the water recedes, or they float to a spot where they hit dry land, then they'll build their colony again in their spot," Keck says.
Seabed nodules are dominated by compounds of iron (which is commonplace) and manganese (which is rarer, but not in short supply from mines on dry land).
After reaching dry land, Schreiber shared a photo of the two of them, the famous waterways and stunning Venetian architecture visible outside the window behind them.
As that air continually passes over hot, dry land, it picks up more heat from the earth, which has been warmed by the mid-autumn sun.
Meanwhile, another concern for rescuers involved animals stranded by the high flood waters, many clumping together on what little dry land was available in their area.
It said China had also agreed to allow Nepal use its dry (land) ports at Lanzhou, Lhasa and Xigatse as well as roads to these facilities.
They were most likely soft and mossy, with shallow roots and few of the adaptations they would later evolve to survive and thrive on dry land.
DENVER – An erratic wildfire charging through extremely dry land in the heart of Colorado ski country destroyed three homes and forced people to flee, authorities said Thursday.
You can turn your fast-moving sports car into a speed boat over dry land, and you'll fly through New York City intersections, skidding on the pavement.
A biologist caught on camera a devastating glimpse of the effects of climate change: a starving polar bear scavenging fruitlessly for scraps of food on dry land.
After wading a few feet into the wet mud of the swamp, Jess spied a tiny puppy tied to a tree on small island of dry land.
The Gulf of California, which separates the Baja Peninsula from Mexico, will surge north into Nevada, turning thousands of square miles of dry land into ocean floor.
This would be Malheur Lake, the focus of the refuge in question, which itself consists only of a few scraps of dry land and then the water.
Sharks that tended to behave the same way when presented with the weird habitat tended to the behave the same way when forced to endure dry land.
You can now see the band on dry land on two New York dates, on Saturday at Radio City Music Hall and on Sunday at Terminal 833.
But from the safety of dry land they are facing the reality that they may have lost their home, which is likely still drifting through the Pacific.
We see the desperate refugees grateful to reach Europe's shores, but we don't see what happens to them on dry land, once they are warehoused in camps.
They were discovered nine days later by two British divers, perched on a small ledge of dry land about 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) from the cave's entrance.
The world is a changed place: Waters have risen, breaking the old America up into small chunks of dry land separated by vast floods and surging rapids.
F.Y.I. Q. The U.S.S. Intrepid is berthed on the Hudson River, but didn't the Navy keep a battleship on dry land in New York 100 years ago?
Back on dry land, the European Union says it has lavished funds on projects to help migrants and send them back home, spending $381 million since 2014.
Their father, a pastor, teaches them a casting rhythm with a metronome, but the brothers discover that life on dry land isn't so easily measured and mastered.
When her own daughter is kidnapped and killed, she tries to drown herself, only to wake up back on dry land a week before her daughter's murder.
"The world of Mad Max has more of a scientific foundation -- at least when it comes to dry-land water sustainability -- than many might think," Overpeck said.
An aerial survey in east Texas days after Hurricane Harvey has found thousands of cattle stranded on small patches of dry land, still surrounded by deep water.
That policy is: Migrants interdicted in U.S. waters, or onboard a vessel moored to a U.S. pier, or on pilings, low-tide elevations or -- and this is the big one -- "aids to navigation" are not considered to have come ashore in the U.S. Migrants who reach structures permanently connected to dry land have not technically landed ashore ... but they are generally treated as if they had reached dry land.
It is adorned by a smug quote from the anti-religious Roman poet Lucretius, about the pleasure of watching a ship plough through a storm from dry land.
One point to make here is that there is over 70 percent more submerged lands in the US than the total amount of dry land in this country.
This was composed of what are now eastern Siberia, bits of Alaska and Yukon in the Americas, and the Bering Strait between them (which was then dry land).
The rest consists of higher dry land where coconut trees are grown, as well as wetlands and a maze of water networks including canals and sea-water inlets.
It focuses on an enormous gathering of walruses that have been forced onto a tiny stretch of dry land due to the shrinking sea ice in the Arctic.
"My physical reaction when I got on dry land with my dog, it was really similar to some stuff I did while deployed (in the Navy)," Chris said.
On dry land, her résumé is no less impressive: She is an honor student with an above-90 average, and a saxophone player in the school's symphonic band.
Some are moving beyond trading, seeking stakes in LNG production and leasing capacity in facilities such as floating import terminals, which are cheaper than those on dry land.
To enrich the soil and discourage pest proliferation, the Lundbergs are growing milo, sunflowers, safflower and beans, and are even trying to grow rice on dry land there.
But it was controversial from the start, with accusations that it would give the federal government control over large swaths of the country, like dry land and puddles.
They may not be armored, but they're a reminder of the evolutionary footsteps and missteps that eventually led to all vertebrates, underwater and up here on dry land.
Later, in the album's penultimate track, "On the Dunes," that same lover abandons him on a shoreline that's encroaching on more and more of the country's dry land.
When on dry land, he spends weeks in the National Archives in College Park, Md., pulling naval records to pinpoint the most likely place a potential "target" sank.
This is the power of "War With the Newts," and why it deserves to be read so long as there is dry land upon which books are printed.
When Mickelson's tee shot on the par-3 16th failed to reach dry land, he winced, doffed his cap and conceded the obvious, and the match, to Molinari.
When sufficiently lubricated, he could be graceful on the country club dance floor, but on dry land he was, for the most part, an awkward and hesitant biped.
"When we came here, we saw two separate ecosystems: the marine ecosystem and … what we call the terrestrial ecosystem or the island, the dry land," he told CNBC.
Business is personal as Marcus visits twelve entrepreneurs looking to get on the path to success, and one flooded town desperate to get back on proverbial dry land.
When a video of an emaciated and bedraggled polar bear searching for food on dry land emerged as a viral symbol of climate change in December, skeptics came running.
This is why a printer of metal ship parts operated by Canada's navy sits safely on dry land, at the Cape Scott fleet-maintenance facility in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
The smell of death hangs heavily over Lake Turkana and dried animal corpses dot the cracked mud where the lake has receded, leaving boats stranded on the dry land.
A man floats his dead nephew away in the Koshi river outside a village in Nepal, after the family could not find any dry land to bury the child.
After managing to wrangle the wallaby out of the water, Earley drove to shore where the damp and presumably relieved mammal was safely released back on to dry land.
I can't remember the exact models I owned but I do remember that they were both packed full of functions, none of which seemed remotely useful on dry land.
The Chisago County Sheriff's Office made light of the hilarious situation and tweeted about the incident alongside a video of the sheriff towing the passengers back to dry land.
If they can manage to stay on dry land and out of any major body of water, then maybe they'll have a chance at becoming the future of transportation.
Some are moving beyond trading, seeking stakes in LNG production and leasing capacity in facilities such as floating import terminals, which are far cheaper than those on dry land.
For the past few years, they have been farming oysters within the dikes that separate dry land from the river Oosterschelde, effectively creating the world's first inner-dike oysters.
Because Hurlburt's runways are positioned so close to the Gulf, planes like the MC-130H often fly briefly over the water before turning to drop parachutists on dry land.
For example, it would not regulate what most people would consider to be dry land, such as depressions that hold water a few days a year after heavy rainfall.
It was a relief to disembark at Wat Klang Pier, stepping off a rush-hour-packed Bangkok boat onto dry land just a 10-minute walk from the gym.
Evidence was everywhere apparent that we were on dry land but on a temperamental raft of ice subject to vast forces of nature against which we were completely irrelevant.
Unlike most monuments that may immediately come to mind, such as the Statue of Liberty or the recently designated Stonewall Inn, the section of the Atlantic includes no dry land.
That, combined with a grueling training regimen that saw him spending hours in the pool seven days a week, allowed him to fine-tune his technique even on dry land.
Once on dry land, those lucky enough to survive the crossing usually head north, where they face many obstacles to seeking safety—including on the border between France and Italy.
Much more of Dory goes down on dry land, mostly in and around a seaside aquatic rehabilitation center where the titular blue tang Dory has tracked her long-lost parents.
The floating barrier will then concentrate the plastic garbage at a central point where it can be fished out of the water and shipped back to dry land for recycling.
Unlock the bays, push them to shore, and use that crane-wielding boat to winch them back to dry land, in the process folding them back into that W shape.
Over the boat ride back to dry land, the pup walked up to Pettit and laid her head down on his lap and began to cry and moan in joy.
Hurricanes are moving more slowly and dropping more rainHurricanes use warm water as fuel, so once a hurricane moves over colder water or dry land, it usually weakens and dissipates.
From a striped sack dress (it'll let in all those much-wanted breezes) to wearing swimwear on dry land, there's plenty to warm up to in not-so-typical ways.
"Most of the whales beached themselves on dry land overnight and have not survived," said Jeremy Chick of the department's Parks and Wildlife Service, who was overseeing the rescue attempt.
But despite my hiking experience, I never felt 100 percent certain that what looked like firm, dry land wouldn't give way and envelop my entire leg — which, inevitably, it did.
Restoration was even underway, they claimed, painting a picture of a palm industry on a sustainable path — farming only on dry land and focused on increasing yields, not expanding footprints.
After more training, another one of my teammates was working in dry land training when she was hit in the head with a fairly large medicine ball, causing a minor concussion.
In the Greek village of Skala Sikamias on the island of Lesbos, Kostas Pideris and Thanasis Marmarinos examined their boats on dry land, propped on wood slats next to the harbor.
The handler keeps pushing the dog (one of the five used in filming) towards the edge of the water, while the dog struggles to stay on dry land using is paws.
Stura and the other volunteers then proceeded to carefully tow the cow one mile back to dry land, where the exhausted animal, now named Red, didn't have the energy to stand.
He had a child-size submarine constructed so divers could pop a kid in, squeeze the metal tube through the cave's narrow passages, and safely deliver each child to dry land.
"There's quite a void after the Games that you need to fill with something... you don't straight away have the motivation to go sailing again," Mills says back on dry land.
As they head towards Scotland, he gives her a very detailed account of what he plans to do to her once they hit dry land, which leads to some steamy sex.
They can also survey the River Jordan, which runs south into the Dead Sea, the fast-evaporating saltwater lake at Earth's lowest point on dry land (430 metres below sea-level).
The group became stranded in the flooded tunnels after a relentless downpour of rain, until two British divers discovered them perched on a small ledge of dry land nine days later.
Okinawa, Japan (CNN)After more than five months stranded at sea on their crippled sailboat, two American women and their dogs are back on dry land and thankful to be alive.
Liam and Luke took full advantage of a nice swell Thursday in the 'Bu, paddling out to catch some waves and get away from all the drama back on dry land.
Over 100 Rohingya Muslims have already drowned attempting to reach dry land, according to estimates by police in Bangladesh, escaping the brutal military crackdown that has already taken hundreds of lives.
SOS Méditerranée has been documenting the journey on its Twitter account, and on Thursday tweeted that the passengers aboard the ship were anxious for dry land as they passed by Sardinia.
Doug Ducey has declared a state of emergency, freeing more money to cover the growing costs of fighting fire on abnormally dry land, as The New York Times reported last month.
In his plays, ranging from early one-acts like "Thirst" to his Pulitzer Prize-winning "Anna Christie," the briny world affects his characters' interpretations, and misinterpretations, of life on dry land.
Lying just off the South Carolina coast in Port Royal Sound, the island is four miles long and three miles wide, with 3,265 acres of dry land, surrounded by salt marsh.
" Writing about Joseph Conrad, George Orwell said that his "most colorful passages may have dealt with the sea, but he is at his most grown-up when he touches dry land.
We will go out with our flashers and orange gloves and sharpened hooks and hunt salmon, tricking them onto dry land, as people here have done for thousands of years before us.
At Hwanggumpyong, where the border between the countries is on dry land, there is just a gate with a single padlock; the guard on the North Korean side has no Chinese counterpart.
It was covered in a blanket, then taken to dry land where it was released in the surrounding area on Quail Island, where it probably won't try its hand at swimming again.
In the comics, Aquaman — who will be played by Jason Momoa in the movie — is the child of a lighthouse keeper and an Atlantis royal who escapes her kingdom for dry land.
This requires owners to acquaint their dog with distance swimming and being attached to a scooter by a bungee cord for the dry-land mushing portion, which takes the place of biking.
Third, it will not to repeal the federal rule that allows the government to regulate almost any waterway in America, including "waters" that are dry land practically every day of the year.
Lifeguards still had to swim 100 yards in 1 minute 20 seconds or less, and they had to run a quarter-mile on dry land in less than 2 minutes 10 seconds.
Teenagers have been doing dumb, rebellious shit ever since the first organism said "fuck you, Mom and Dad" and dragged itself out of the primordial ooze to set off on dry land.
To keep SpongeBob in the dark before the party, his best friend Patrick Star arranges one heckuva trip for the pair to visit the live-action world of the dry land above.
The judge said, nope, the lighthouse -- which even in low tide sits in four feet of water -- isn't dry land, thus the Cubans are "wet foot" migrants, so they'll be sent back. 5.
In a post from his personal Twitter account, Musk added that trying to land on a seaborne vessel was "definitely harder" than a conventional space landing, which would take place on dry land.
Assuming the box-office winds are favorable, that means these "Pirates" might not see much dry land if there are more moviegoers to plunder -- or rather, willingly hand over their hard-earned loot.
Click here to view original GIFYouTube is filled with videos of drone pilots desperately trying to get their quadcopters back to dry land before the battery dies and it plummets into a lake.
The imperfect, prototypical VR headset display-units of recent years — which so exquisitely, if inadvertently, realized Kafka's notion of "seasickness on dry land" — are now figuring to be a thing of the past.
But his system proves ineffective against sharknadoes that form on dry land — like the one that rises out of the desert and disrupts the grand opening of his shark-themed Las Vegas resort.
Officials with the United States Geological Survey posted stunning video of lava filling in and beginning to forge a delta in the now dry-land location that had been known as Kapoho Bay.
On dry land, the party was spotted getting competitive playing games like cornhole and bocce, sipping on cocktails all the while (with plenty of Aaron and Cranston's Mezcal Dos Hombres to go around!).
They finally left the boat one-by-one some six hours later, stepping down a flight of steps to touch dry land for the first time since leaving Libya at least 10 days ago.
With all the roads in the Muskogee County town flooded, the residents have turned their boats into water taxis, heading to makeshift docks on dry land nearby to get what they need to survive.
The migrants promptly filed suit in federal court, asking a judge to declare that they reached United States dry land, and allow them to seek relief as Cuban refugees pursuant to U.S. immigration law.
Its test landing on dry land, which is an arguably easier accomplishment considering the lack of waves at the landing pad in Cape Canaveral, Florida, was successful and marked a new era in spaceflight.
"The main reason for introducing this technique was to enable communities, particularly in dry-land areas, to build resilience to climate stresses, increase food productivity and engage in agribusiness for income generation," Mulevu said.
Some are moving beyond trading, seeking stakes in LNG production and leasing capacity in facilities such as floating import terminals, which are cheaper to build and faster to install than those on dry land.
However the dry land ended up being too salty for farming and was slowly picked up by developers who laid out a grid of streets and sold off boxy parcels, most without proper titles.
Before moving to his daughter's home six years ago, Mr. Yarbrough lived, during his dry-land periods, on Lake Chapala, near Guadalajara, Mexico, where he grew fruit and vegetables to give to the poor.
Eating is also incredibly difficult as the strict rules of cross channel swimming prevent her from touching the side of her support boat or any of its crew — even when she reaches dry land.
The National Weather Service forecast office in New Orleans is monitoring the threat for up to 4 to 6 feet of inundation above normally dry land with the storm, as a reasonable worst case scenario.
But a new report, published in the journal Cell on Thursday, overturns that notion, suggesting the template for walking originated in ancient fish millions of years before the first vertebrate ever ambled on dry land.
"I was just trying to get home, and here we are," said Ms. Abelenda, whose son had managed to get to the house around lunch time and reported that it was still on dry land.
"There will be several of these producers who won't be able to make it through this," said Steve Erdman, a Nebraska state senator and longtime farmer whose district includes some of the newly dry land.
Inching my Communist relic through the unpeopled, snowbound vastness of the Eurasian boreal forest — the largest terrestrial eco-region on earth, our planet's default state on dry land — was a journey into unplumbed personal depths.
In this tragically regressive framing, literally everyone wins: the desperate harpies of D.C., AND the company that laid waste to dating scenes in other regions of America by attracting men like rats to dry land.
Except for the simple fact that in the water, you have no choice but to struggle to support yourself atop an inflatable pterodactyl or whatever, and on dry land, we have these things called normal chairs.
Related An Indoor Thunderstorm Lets You Make Music Using Thunder And Lightning Artists Turn Tracking Data From A Journey Across Spain Into A Giant Marble Mandala This Gorgeous Light Installation Replicates Waves Breaking on Dry Land
"Radical Seafaring," organized by the Parrish Art Museum curator Andrea Grover, brings together 25 artists and collectives who create, as she writes, "land art, only afloat": installations and performances designed to be experienced off dry land.
It's a sharp contrast from last autumn, when the restaurant's calamari fisherman was busy hauling sea-soaked asylum seekers to dry land, and waiters turned tables into makeshift hospital beds for shipwrecked survivors treated for hypothermia.
Royal Dutch Shell's mammoth Prelude FLNG plant, for example will be aboard the world's biggest floating structure, but must squeeze the equipment into a quarter of the space occupied by an LNG plant on dry land.
The US has an agreement with Cuba, known as the "wet-foot, dry-land" policy, that allows anyone fleeing Cuba who makes it onto American soil to stay in the country and eventually pursue permanent residency.
Black evacuees were escorted to dry land by Hispanic volunteers; Hispanic evacuees were rescued by white strangers; Jews were helped by Christians; Muslims cleared debris for non-Muslims; the rich crowded into shelters with the poor.
The outhouse race, in which teams of five drag wooden port-a-potties on skis across the ice — two pushing, two pulling, one enthroned on the toilet seat — was relocated to the dry land outside Duffy's Tavern.
Given they live about 50 years -- months of which at a time they often don't return to dry land -- that means some of the birds we see now will grow up to see their diet change massively.
The unseasonable weather accelerated snow melt in the mountains, but some of the water soaked into the dry land or evaporated and did not end up in the reservoirs that feed Norway's hydropower plants, raising electricity prices.
The NHC is warning of storm inundation as high as 9 feet or more above normally dry land all the way up the neighboring section of coast, and of "life-threatening inundation" along the Florida east coast.
So then, the case centers on this question: Was it completely unreasonable for the Coast Guard to determine that the lighthouse was an aid to navigation, and therefore did not constitute dry land of the United States?
From the drop zone on the 12th, he fatted a wedge into the water and was reaching for another ball from caddie Michael Greller almost before it fell from the sky, 20 yards short of dry land.
Pascaline Eloundou, an elderly resident of Nkolbikok, said that when her thatched house was built 20 years ago it was on dry land – but in the past few years it had become more vulnerable to worsening floods.
Land acquisition is less of a concern in other border states, where much of the land is owned by the federal government and, except for a short span on the Colorado River, the border crosses dry land.
The Obama administration expanded that definition far beyond the plain English understanding of the word "navigable" to dry land that may have water runoff after a heavy rain or may not, and to wetlands far away from rivers.
When Baluchi announced on his website that he'd be giving the open ocean run another shot, the Guard sent him a letter explaining how unsafe his insane voyage was and asked him to please stay on dry land.
More Cubans are coming to the United States because they fear that a thaw in U.S.-Cuban relations will end a longstanding policy granting legal status to any Cuban national who reaches dry land in the United States.
In January, the committee granted her a training scholarship, and Spannekrebs started Mardini on a rigorous daily schedule: two two-hour sessions in the water and another hour of dry-land aerobic training, with school sessions in between.
Other scientists have traced the evolution of mammalian lactation and concluded that it arose not as a convenient way to feed baby, but to help our egg-laying ancestors tackle the challenge of water management on dry land.
" The Dissident By the start of 1964, Bruce began to double-down on his earlier criticism of "ineffective" styles and techniques, and began given lecture-heavy demonstrations featuring stinging rebukes towards "dry-land swimmers" practicing the "classical mess.
"I grabbed my rabbit, I got the dog, I got all the food possible, and I just waited for them to bring the boats to us to get out," she told KYW, after rescuers ferried her to dry land.
The earthy smell of low tide crept into the parking lot, reminding us that The Neck is named for the point where the peninsula narrows to only a mile's width of dry land between the Ashley and Cooper Rivers.
The period is known as the "Age of the Fishes" for the number of species born during the era, but it also was a time when plants spread from wetlands to dry land -- giving way to the first forests.
"Once he was back on dry land, you could see his back legs were wet so we guessed that he has maybe tried to swim back to shore but decided the current was maybe too strong," the description reads.
Even though Mars is smaller than Earth, it has the same surface area in terms of dry land (because Earth's surface is two-thirds oceans), which helps explain the size of the task of exploring the geology of Mars.
This was the late 1990s and early 2000s, when 56k modems were fast — nearly a decade before social media gurus would shed their gills and learn to breathe on dry land, where they've pretended to be human ever since.
Alta Jean-Baptiste, head of the Haiti's Department of Civil Protection, said one man was killed by large waves at sea over the weekend, and another went missing when his boat capsized, despite warnings to stay on dry land.
Yes, the dry land where no one is a cartoon, and where people breathe oxygen, eat fish, and hang out with David Hasselhoff — the former Baywatch actor and beloved-in-Germany pop star makes a guest appearance as himself.
A ship crosses dry land The Hao Fan 6's journeys in the weeks before the ban show the massive ship, which can transport 8,343 tons of cargo, appearing to travel on land across large swaths of South Korea.
Standing knee-deep in flood water in a west Houston neighborhood, Margolis fielded a steady stream of phone calls as he helped residents clamber out of boats and onto a bridge that formed a rare spit of dry land.
There was a dry-land replica of the CG36 mounted on gimbals that could make it roll and plunge, and another replica floating in the tank itself, where there was also a full-size, tiltable mock-up of the Pendleton hull.
For instance: The rule also explicitly exempted a number of bodies of water often found on farms, such as puddles, ditches, artificial ponds for livestock watering, and irrigation systems that would revert to dry land if irrigation were to stop.
For those pitiful few who don't know the entire SpongeBob oeuvre by heart, the song comes from an episode called "Band Geeks," in which SpongeBob and the gang venture up onto dry land to perform during halftime at the Bubble Bowl.
Now, the world must keep all its fingers crossed that all 12 boys and their coach will be reunited on dry land, and served all of the pad krapow, KFC, and "many types of food" they could ever possibly want.
This veritable feast of science fiction comes after some pretty impressive science facts, as SpaceX successfully landed its Falcon 9 rocket on dry land for the second time, delivering yet more supplies to the International Space Station along the way.
This is where the location-zipping comes back to haunt the show to some extent: After a brief prelude on dry land, Petersen barely left the boat, and he could engage with these men's incomprehensible task on its own terms.
"It was risky, in the early part of [the 20th] century, to presume to write fiction about ordinary, rough-hewn people engaged in the rigors of dry land farming in frontier Nebraska," Kathleen Norris writes in her introduction to the novel.
The technique has been used to restore thousands of hectares of dry land and in doing so reduce hunger in Burkina Faso and Niger since he began to teach it in the 1980s, according to the Right Livelihood Award Foundation.
These commonalities suggest not only that many of the adaptations to dry land were gained before plants moved ashore, but also that some complex ancestral features were lost by the pond species over time when they ceased to be useful.
I couldn't find any reports of attacks on humans from sea otters, but that may just be a function of sea otters being much rarer than river otters, and spending less time on or near dry land than river otters do.
The expansiveness of the Carr Fire can be credited to dry land that ignites easily, strong winds, and a topography that enables a fire to travel quickly, said Brenda Belongie, lead meteorologist of the federal Forest Service's Predictive Services in Northern California.
In reality, the rule provides certainty over streams and wetlands that have historically been covered by the Clean Water Act while preserving agricultural and other common sense exemptions, including for things like maintenance of drainage ditches and stock watering ponds on dry land.
Workers in hard hats spent an hour or so helping divers connect slings to the World War Two-style amphibious vessel some 80 feet (24 meters) below the water's surface before raising it and dragging it, dripping but apparently intact, to dry land.
While the terrifying incident and ensuing rescue by emergency services and nearby ferry boats, ended with all 153 passengers and crew members alive and safely on dry land, the audio recording of Sullenberger's conversation with air traffic controllers is still chilling to listen to.
I'm stealing this comparison from a travel site, but the swamp has a Brothers Grimm feel to it: The forest seems haunted; in every direction are these tall, skinny trees anchored to patches of dry land rising up out of the water (here's a photo).
SpaceX first managed to successfully land the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket back on dry land in 2015, and in 0003, the company repeated the feat three times in much tougher conditions, landing the rocket on a drone ship in the ocean.
And, unlike mining developments in virgin areas of dry land, which tend to bring other forms of development in their wake by creating transport links that encourage human settlement, no one is going to follow the nodule-hoovers and actually live on the abyssal plain.
Though there are arguments about the details, the consensus is that it was around 2000,0003 years ago, when retreating glaciers at the end of the last ice age permitted travellers from Asia to cross what is now the Bering strait but was then dry land.
In 1876 and 22015, when the summer rains failed completely, India's administrators invoked the authority of Adam Smith to argue against intervening in the famine which began to spread across the dry land, eventually claiming 21976m lives (some estimates say the total was far higher).
Almost 21 years later the Olmsted Locks and Dam, which will replace 2393 and 2239, is still under construction, in part because the Corps, to save money, experimented with building in the wet rather than making the dam in sections on dry land first.
Aside from his ring entrance, which is best described as a Rockettes kick transitioned into a Vince McMahon strut transitioned into a run down the ramp that mostly resembled a seal ambling onto dry land, 9:02 ET through 9:04 ET was LaVar time.
For, a mere 10,000 years ago, the coral-covered seabed that now forms the Great Barrier Reef was dry land—a fact lamented in the songs, tales and dances of indigenous people living along the coast, which speak of homelands being drowned by incoming waters.
The storm surge is expected to cause inundation of coastal areas of 9 feet or more in some spots in northern Florida, meaning that 9 feet or more of water will cover typically dry land if the storm hits at the time of high tide.
CATANIA, Italy (Reuters) - Migrants forced to remain on board the ship that rescued them off the coast of Libya almost two weeks ago stepped onto dry land in Sicily on Thursday, with Italy's government promising to continue to block charity ships from its ports.
In other words, the ruling Chinese Communist Party claims the right to dictate what Chinese and foreign vessels and aircraft can and cannot do within the nine-dashed line — much as Chinese law governs what citizens and foreigners do within China's frontiers on dry land.
In addition to "Beetle Bailey" he created "Hi and Lois," with Dik Browne, based on Mr. Walker's family members' lives; "Boner's Ark," featuring quirky animals and their search for dry land; and "Sam's Strip," about a comic strip character running his own comic strip.
Located in London's East End, it straddles the Docklands to its east, where new arrivals to Britain once hit dry land, and to its west the city, whose shiny office towers stand as the symbols of wealth and opportunity that have attracted so many newcomers.
Jana Swearingen had to hitch three separate boat rides, crossing from one patch of dry land to the next, to get to her job as a nurse at Christus Southeast Texas St. Elizabeth Hospital in Beaumont, from her home in Lumberton, just north of the city.
After so many days at sea, it felt a bit strange to be on dry land again — but only for a short time, as by evening the other passengers and I had to be back on the Amerigo Vespucci to continue on to nearby Hong Kong.
In the case of these, they were able to show how three earlier periods of diversification were related to the break-up of the supercontinent, called Pangaea, into which most of Earth's dry land was united between 250m and 175m years ago, after which it began to divide.
Picture of the day On dry land A Palestinian boy who lives in a container as a temporary replacement for his house that was destroyed in the 2014 war jumps over a flooded path on a rainy day in Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip December 15, 2016.
AS THE clock strikes midnight on January 1st 2018, revellers on the easternmost islands of Kiribati will be the first people on dry land to ring in the new year—a claim made possible by their location in the Pacific Ocean and an arbitrary designation of time zones.
In the clip above, RSPCA Inspector Jaqui Miller pulls Hardy the labrador from the middle of a frozen river in Northumberland, UK. The footage is pretty tense, but the ending was a happy one — Hardy made it back to dry land with only a small cut on one paw.
The best we can do is construct arks within which we can ride it out, and by God's grace make it across the dark sea of time to a future when we do find dry land again, and can start the rebuilding, reseeding, and renewal of the earth.
"I know, we're dorks," says Hamilton, now a voice-over artist and actress who has worked on TV.The Path To Princess-hoodHamilton had worked on the Disney Cruise Line playing various characters, so it felt like a natural next step to her to continue the work on dry land.
That competition — which took American astronauts to the moon in 1969 — was also a big reason that American flags were ultimately hoisted over the best piece of dry land in Antarctica, on which McMurdo Station sits, and over the most symbolic spot on the continent, the South Pole.
VENICE — "You guys, just say 'skooozy' and walk through," a young American woman commanded her friends, caught in one of the bottlenecks of tourist traffic that clog Venice's narrow streets, choke its glorious squares and push the locals of this enchanting floating city out and onto drab, dry land.
"Quite simply, the secret of plunging into icy water lies in the feeling that surges through your body once you get out of the water — as soon as you're back on dry land your circulation kicks in and your body starts to warm up and makes you feel, well, happy."
It's not clear in the clip (below) whether or not the car actually floats in the way that Musk describes, but it certainly makes better headway than vehicles stranded in the same tunnel, pushing through the water with relative ease and making it to dry land on the other side.
Mr. Revuelta, 38, came to America by raft when he was 16, along with his father and two brothers, in 1994, just before President Bill Clinton signed the agreement with Cuba that allowed refugees to stay only if they reached dry land, the so-called "wet foot, dry foot" policy.
At the end of each day, he pulls his boat out of the water, loads into on a trailer, then hauls it with a tractor more than half a mile through the desert, over dry land that was once underwater, and rinses the salt water off the boat each night.
Many years from now, assuming we aren't searching for dry land, the dual release of Horizon Zero Dawn and Breath of the Wild will mark the decline of one dominant style of video game, and the ascension of another, a kind of baton handoff made in an unusually warm first week of March.
In many ways, Palau's and our neighbors' strategic importance is the same as it was during World War II, when the islands were the site of some of the fiercest fighting of the Pacific campaign: The territory is the only dry land available for airfields over thousands of miles of blue ocean.
Dr. Shields, who is part of a global effort to find new ways to grow rice on dry land, began his research, and realized that the Trinidad hill rice might be linked to the missing American rice, which in turn could be traced all the way back to the West African rice fields.
Ironically, in their rush to stay dry, few could hear Cara Despain's "Sea Unseen" (2016), an audio installation tucked into a storm drain, in which the sea describes its drowning of the city, or see Nicole Doran's "Holding on" (2017), a ceramic planter depicting a hand grasping a phallic cactus — reaching, as it were, for dry land.
Americans, Canadians, Australians, and people from Hong Kong on the ship have been given the option to fly home to dry land for another 14-day period of isolation, and the most elderly, vulnerable passengers over 80 years old on the ship have been offered rooms and bento boxes on land to finish out their quarantines.
Not having the resources I enjoy on dry land (instruments, microphones, etc) will certainly be a challenge, but I also think that having such significant restrictions will be helpful creatively: it will force me to use the tools I am able to bring on board more effectively and to think about my whole creative process in a new and hopefully fruitful way.
Stéphane Graillot's overhead lighting casts the dancers' shadows on the floor; you could say at times that we're seeing the latest update of the famous "Pas de l'Ombre," created by the choreographer Jules Perrot in 1843 for his Romantic ballet "Ondine," in which the title character, a water spirit, is enchanted to find on dry land that she casts a shadow with which she dances.
Other possible options for helping to prevent drownings include: schools incorporating dry land water safety curriculum into physical education classes so that students learn proper water positioning before they're in the water; leveraging relationships with first responders in communities; improved drowning-related data collection, and effective information sharing so that first responders have an accurate picture of where, how, and why people are drowning.
Word of the Day deluge \ˈdel-ˌyüj \ noun and verb noun: a heavy rain noun: the rising of a body of water and its overflowing onto normally dry land noun: an overwhelming number or amount verb: fill or cover completely, usually with water verb: fill quickly beyond capacity; as with a liquid verb: charge someone with too many tasks _________ The word deluge has appeared in 190 articles on nytimes.

No results under this filter, show 396 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.